What to Know
- In an Adobe Illustrator file, hold the Shift key and draw a circle using the Ellipse tool.
- Select Text tool and choose Type on a Path. Position the cursor on the circle where you want the text to appear.
- With the Type panel open, select the Character tab. Select a font and size. Enter the text, which is aligned to the circle.
This article explains how to add curved text to the top and bottom of a circle in Adobe Illustrator 2017 and later.
How to Type on a Path in Illustrator
To add text to a circle or any path in Illustrator, draw a circle, choose the Path Text Tool, click the circle, and type. The tricky part comes when you want to add two phrases and have one right side up at the top of the circle and one right side up at the bottom of the circle. Here's how:
-
Press and hold the Shift key and draw a circle with the Ellipse tool. It doesn't matter what color the stroke or fill is because they both disappear when you click with the text tool.
To draw a perfect circle outwards from the center, press Option+Shift on a Mac or Alt+Shift on Windows.
-
Select the Text tool drop-down menu and choose the Type on a Path Tool.
-
Open the Type panel and select Paragraph (Window > Type > Paragraph). Alternatively, click the Align Center button in the Panel Options. This step sets the justification to center.
-
Click the top center of the circle. A flashing input cursor appears. When you enter the text, it's center-aligned as you type.
-
With the Type panel open, click the Character tab. Choose a font and size, then enter the text for the top of the circle. The text runs along the top of the circle. The stroke on the shape is used as the baseline for the text.
-
Switch to the Direct Selection tool, click once on the circle, then copy it to the clipboard.
To paste the object in front of the current object, select Edit > Paste in Front. It will look the same (except the text appears heavier because the new one is pasted on top of the original).
To make things simple, open the Layers panel and rename one of the layers to indicate it's the front copy.
-
Before flipping the text, open the Layers panel and turn off the visibility of the bottom layer. Switch to the Type Tool, select the text, and enter the new text.
-
Select Type > Type on a Path > Type on a Path Options to open the Path Options dialog box. Choose Rainbow for the Effect, and for Align to Path, choose Ascender. The Ascender is the highest part of the lettering and places the text outside the circle.
-
Check the Flip box, then check Preview so you can see how it will look. Spacing can also be adjusted here. Click OK.
The Rainbow option doesn't distort the text.
-
Click away from the text to deselect it and choose the Selection Tool in the toolbox. You'll see a handle at the top of the shape and two handles at the bottom.
The top handle moves the text along the path as you drag it but, depending on how you drag the handle, the text may move inside the circle. If you roll the cursor over this handle, it switches to a Rotate cursor. The two handles at the bottom are the ones you should use. These handles rotate the object instead of moving the text. When finished, turn on the visibility of the hidden layer.
-
Drag a relevant symbol from the Symbols palette, and drag to resize it to fit the circle, and you're done.
![The completed exercise with graphic is shown.](https://www.lifewire.com/thmb/y8saJbYk4zD2lcr70Uij50VUccA=/1500x0/filters:no_upscale():max_bytes(150000):strip_icc()/Path_07-5794d09b3df78c1734a50747.jpg)